The Dr. Lodi Podcast
The Dr. Lodi Podcast empowers people to think for themselves and teaches people how to achieve optimal health, free from cancer and all other chronic conditions. Dr. Lodi shares evidence-based information and reveals the truth about cancer, health, and healing. As a medical doctor, clinical psychologist, nutritionist, historian, philosopher, and the pioneer of what has now become the definitive route for those unsatisfied with the modern cancer treatment system, Dr. Lodi will deliver information that you’ve never heard before. Tune in and discover what a True Second Opinion really means, how to Stop Making Cancer, why there is no such thing as “diseases,” and what you are TRULY capable of achieving in your life.
The Dr. Lodi Podcast
Episode 170 - 10.26.25 Stop Saying Cancer And Start Changing Your Biology
What if the most dangerous thing in your health journey isn’t your diagnosis, but the words wrapped around it? We unpack why language can weaken or empower the immune system, reframing “cancer” as chronically fermenting cells to shift focus from fear to metabolism, mitochondria, oxygen, and the biochemical terrain that cells inhabit.
We move case by case to ground the principles. A meningioma reminds us that “benign” growth in a closed cranial space still demands strategy beyond surgery and radiation. A three-year-old on repeat antibiotics reveals how overprescribing undermines the microbiome and drives chronic symptoms, while simple, powerful steps—play in nature, nutrient-dense food, better sleep—build resilient immunity. A persistent foul odor prompts a serious differential from oral sources to lung abscess, showing when to pause supplements and seek immediate evaluation.
Listeners ask about liver and breast cases, topical DMSO with antiparasitics, and stage 4 spread. We clarify where ivermectin, fenbendazole, and niclosamide fit—and where they don’t. They’re tools, not cures. The foundation remains detoxification, circadian repair, targeted micronutrients (vitamin C, D, E families, iodine with thyroid support, melatonin), and immune guidance via thymus support. For neuropathy in the foot, we trace likely spinal roots and outline non-surgical options like prolotherapy alongside proper assessment. We connect thyroid, breast, and dental health via shared meridians and advocate for a biological dentist with cone beam imaging to uncover silent drivers. Crohn’s gets a terrain-first reset: cleanse, uncooked organic plant foods, and strategic reseeding to correct severe dysbiosis where standard care offers little more than suppression.
We close with a practical look at peptides and bioregulators—MOTS-c, SS-31, BPC-157, TB-500—
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This episode features answers to health and cancer-related questions from Dr. Lodi’s social media livestream on Jan. 19th, 2025
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Join Dr. Lodi's Inner Circle membership and unlock exclusive access to webinars, healthy recipes, e-books, educational videos, live Zoom Q&A sessions with Dr. Lodi, plus fresh content every month. Elevate your healing journey today by visiting drlodi.com and use the coupon code podcast (all lowercase: P-O-D-C-A-S-T) for 30% off your first month on any membership option.
Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast
Welcome to the Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast. This is the show for you if you’re...
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Here we are, Sunday Night Live on Planet Earth. Planet Earth. Kind of round globe ish. But I'm old school. Absolutely. New school is what? I don't even think about it. Anyway, so yeah, welcome to uh Monday morning live in Asia and Australia. And Sunday Night Live on the other side of the earth. All right. Um, let's do it. Are we okay? I think everything is all set. I hope.
SPEAKER_00:Should I be in portrait? Or what I gotta change this and change this, that. There we go.
SPEAKER_01:There we go. Okay, portrait. Cool.
unknown:Here we go.
SPEAKER_01:All right. So welcome. Sunday night live. Anyway, uh, interesting is that um good evening. It's a flat, yeah, sure, it's a flat flatter. And it ends at what? It ends at are there walls? Or does it not end? And it's daylight here and sunlight and the darkness here. Anyway, it makes sense to me. As long as I'm not thinking. Cool. So we're all here dealing. Fantastic. All right, good, good, good. Let's get let's try to do as many questions as we can today. Yeah. Probably aware that there's what is it called? The Atlas, something that's flying towards us just past the sun, or something like that. Whatever that means, right? Who knows what's in store? So let's not even think about it because it's too weird. Too weird. Let's go to some. Here we are. Okay, cool. All right. So, yeah, and uh by the way, uh, if uh if you're not in a group yet, then um think about it because um today's format, I know tonight's format, uh, what we have to do is wake up, Dr. Lodi. Wake up. Okay, Emma, I'm awake. Thank you very much. Um, as you know, this format is people have sent in questions and we're gonna try to answer most as many as we can, uh, and we can't really interact. Um, and and that's the problem because a lot of times the questions aren't complete. There's a lot of missing parts that, and and I can't really answer it that well because I need to have more information. So it would require some dialogue. And so that's what we are um that's why we have these groups, right? And because I no longer do uh private consultations, because uh it makes you know these groups are makes much more sense. I can work with a lot of different people at the same time, and um and it's an ongoing rather than just having a one two-hour consultation, it's weekly or twice a week with some groups, right? So we it's an ongoing, right? Which is how life is, it's ongoing. So a one-time consultation is is okay, but but then what about uh three weeks from now? You know, so that's why we have these groups, all right? Uh so here we are. Um just join these groups. It's the CFC group. If you have chronically fermenting cells, um, and you all know what the chronically fermenting cells are by now. I hope so. Um it's what some people call cancer, but cancer is an astrological sign. Um so these are chronically fermenting cells. So there's a CFC group, then there's the parasite group, and then there's the health and healing group. So go to dr.drloti.com, drloodie.com, and you can find out. Just join those groups so that we can interact and I can answer these, I can answer questions more to your satisfaction and my satisfaction because I did not want to answer the question. All right, so here um and what is this thing? Um, yeah, so so and remember, uh on on X and uh TikTok, it's uh at DR Thomas Lodi MD. And all the rest Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, LinkedIn, Rumble, etc., it's at DR Thomas Lodi. There's no MD at the end. Okay, that's how you find us. Okay. And then there is the um uh the the Dr. Lodi podcast. Um, yeah. Right. And then uh it says here, so please like, follow, share this live, and subscribe to our channel so you'll receive notifications every time we go live or post new content. Okay, good webinar. Uh okay, good. And as a reminder, the webinar, the human diet, which is a four-part series. We're still waiting on part four. I'm we're gonna do that anyway. I want to think about it now. So, anyway, let's get on to the questions because um I don't want to waste too much time um not doing that because I know everyone's very interested. Uh and here is all right, cool, fantastic. A lot of people from uh all right, yeah. So again, this question has come up with always the questions, questions come up with antiparasitic medications and CFCs. Okay, and you guys have to stop using the words that that John D. Rockefeller and his buddies put together in the disease model that have you on a on a nice train that ends at the morgue. I'm telling you, use words, use their language, you'll enter the hospital one day, and you won't be going out a primary exit, you'll be going out the secondary exit called the morgue. Okay, I'm telling you. I know. How do I know? Internship, residency, and then I admitted to worked in hospitals for years. That's how I know. Okay, okay, all right, Emma. I gotcha, I gotcha. Anyway, you guys, you're asking me questions, and you gotta join the group so we can do those questions. And by the way, there's a few people on the groups who don't know what's available on the groups, and I don't understand that. Because they're sending and wanting to have a private consultation because they can't get questions answered. Just join the Zooms. We have these Zooms Mondays and Wednesdays, 5 p.m. Arizona time, wherever you else you are. I use Arizona time because they don't change um clocks for daylight savings. But every Monday and Wednesday, so if you're in a group, you'd go on there and we'd ask the questions and we go through your situation.
SPEAKER_00:All right.
SPEAKER_01:So let's look at this. Is from Betty, and Betty says, my niece has recurring meningioma on her head. It's her third recurrence in surgery and radiation. Is surgery and radiation her only option? She is now 52 years old. Uh, good morning, upstate New York. Yay! B. Um, the question is, is is are are surgery and radiation the only options? Well, first of all, meningiomas, if just for clarification of terms, I mean the meninges is the tissue that uh covers the brain and spinal cord, kind of connects it to the skull and to the uh, you know, to the to the vertebra, it's kind of a covering, and it's got three layers to it. Anyways, the middle layer is the one that kind of grows in what are called meningiomas. So it's tissue called the meninges, about three times more common in women, and uh you know, the average age is up around 60, 65, like that. Although, you know, there are variations in that. Um, it's usually considered benign. And, you know, the difference bet in this situation with benign, when when it's intracranial, when it's in the head, you know, the the the the distinction between benign and malignant is almost irrelevant because um, you know, because you're in a closed space and growth is going to cause compromise of the brain functions, you know. So, you know, it's uh malignant usually, you know, malignant uh, you know, by definition, should be um the the Warburg effect or um what's called aerobic glycolysis, which is you know, meaning that uh the cells are fermenting regardless of whether or not there's oxygen present. Because normal, I mean, cells that are not in that condition, healthy cells, um, will ferment only when there's no oxygen. If there's oxygen, then it goes into the mitochondria and that's how it produces energy. If there's not not enough mitochondria around, or if there's no oxygen, or whatever happens, um, then it will go into fermentation. All right. So um, you know, that would be that that that that's what distinguishes it on a molecular level. And then in terms of its activity, uh, the thing about uh uh chronically fermenting cells is they um spread. So it clearly then in a bit called a benign meningioma tumor, uh it wouldn't spread. However, it's still in a closed space, it's still gonna cause major problems uh with every, you know, anything, anything from headache and pain and you know, dizziness, seizures, uh loss of cognitive function, you know, sensory impairment. It's just it's terrible. So the question is, is there anything, is there any other uh way to deal with this other than chemo and radiation? Well, uh, in you know, oddly enough, one of the risk factors for meningiomas is radiation, having had radiation therapy. So that's bizarre, that's one of the treatments. And surgery often, you know, these it don't work. And again, remember, just like whether we're talking about a fungus on the toenail or we're talking about a tumor in the brain, whatever we're talking about, we have to realize and keep in mind that things, every whatever our body is doing, it's doing it in response to the environment of that of the body. And when we talk when we're talking about the body, we're talking on a cellular level. So every cell, every group of cells that are called tissues and organs and glands are living in a biochemical environment. And that biochemical environment is uh contributed to by the blood, the blood and the arteries, pumped out of the heart, um, freshly oxygenated, gets to the tissues, and it diffuses across the capillaries, and that and that that that that fluid that diffuses across serves as the called the interstitial fluid or the extracellular matrix. But anyway, it's the environment in which cells live. And it's that environment that they are that the cells are responding. So, what else is so what's in that blood? What's in that blood are everything you've eaten, drank, it's coming through your skin, you know, you you've inhaled, all that's in there. Also, all the all the uh molecules and other biochemicals that you're producing in your body, such as hormones and peptides and proteins and um all all that's in that fluid as well. Um and uh then of course there's the waste, the you know, the cellular waste, the biochemical, the first of all, the toxins that got in and hadn't haven't yet been detoxified by the liver and as well as metabolic wastes. So that's the the the the the the the aquarium or the soup or the stew or the environment in which cells live, and that's what they're responding to. So whenever we have something going on in our body, we have to understand that it's it's in response to that, it's not like happening on itself. It doesn't do something, it doesn't start it, it it's only responding. Let me give you an example. Um for example, if you you've got cells, cells that have okay, if you had a lot, you have a lot of estrogen in that environment, in that in the extracellular fluid. So the cells that are going to be uh affected by that are cells with estrogen receptors. All right, so the estrogen receptors will get saturated, all that, all that. So those signals, and it works, it's a systemic-wide thing. Especially the receptors in the brain, part of the brain called the hypothalamus, will determine that and it will send a signal to pituitary all the way down to the cells to tell them to stop making estrogens. Anyway, that's the cell will stop making estrogens. If there's not enough estrogens, it'll start making it. Uh, if there's too much glucose because you're eating too much uh, you know, it's cooked carbohydrates and you know, sweet cooked carbohydrates basically, which includes everything down the candy bars, right? Uh, you've got too much glucose, so the cells are going to become say, wait a minute, too much, and they become insulin resistance. Insulin is what lets glucose in. So they become insulin resistant to protect themselves. Okay, so that's a response, it's not something that just happens, it happens. And this whole idea of a genetic predisposition is that's exactly what it means, genetic predisposition. They want me to repeat that again, okay. I'm gonna try to, I'm not gonna get close, but that's what genetic predisposition predisposition means. It doesn't mean anything, there's no such thing as you have a prenat genetic predisposition. That's kind of like pre-boarding, right? Okay, we're gonna take pre-boarding now. So all the people that were sitting there around the the the the uh the uh waiting for their flight, they weren't boarding yet, so they were pre-boarding, right? Wasn't that pre-boarding? No, no, no. Now we're gonna start pre-boarding. See, all these words are bizarre, they make no sense, but you know, we follow them like you know, really, really, really, really uh polite and uh the appropriate robots, you know. So anyway, language is everything, it's the way you uh it's the way you perceive reality as your language. So be very careful and use it. You know, I was watching this. Uh what do you call it? This uh somebody sent me a reel or whatever. Um, and it was some really good information, but the guy's going, yo, me, yo, you uh yours shit. Yeah, so why talk like that? Why there's just one generation, is my son's generation, my daughter's somehow it became a thing to do. If you want to be whatever, you're gonna talk like you never went to school and you never studied. And the more you can talk like that, then what even if you're trying to transmit some really important information. I don't know. Anyway, language is really going getting back to the meningioma, and as I was saying, you put a fungus on the toenail, it doesn't matter what it is. Remember, it's uh whatever our body's doing, it's doing in response to something. Therefore, what do we do to manage it? We need to click get rid of any potential garbage, poisons, toxins at all. That's what we got to do because our body's gonna respond to the is responding to those. We need to make sure that that environment in which our cells are living have everything that they need for optimal functioning and nothing that they don't need, nothing that will hamper that functioning. If we can do that, then it's gonna be fine because genetically, the the the genetics are that uh to produce and optimally function. We're not hardwired to mess up, we're not hardwired to, we don't have genetic predispositions to there's no such thing as a genetic predisposition. I would like someone, I would like a geneticist to explain to me what is a genetic predisposition. It's a predisposition, it's not a disposition, it's a predisposition. And now, if you notice the what you can go and look up any condition in the world, and you're gonna see now that in addition to uh lots of glucose causing insulin resistance, it's also a genetic predisposition. Of course, it's a genetic predosition, it's a genetic response, it's a way how it's a way your body will uh homo homeostatically adapt to too much glucose. It's a genetic predosition, uh, I guess so. Anyway, so this meningioma, whatever it's not just happening, it's happening because something. So, what you want to do, since we don't know, and if you go look at all the experts, you can look at Mail Clinic, you can look at uh Johns Hopkins, you can anywhere, they're gonna say, Well, we don't really know what it is or what it's doing, but so they don't know now. Of course, because it happens in women more frequently than men, then we've got to look at hormones, right? What's the difference between men and women? Hormones a little bit more than that, but anyway. Um, yeah, there are estrogen receptors on these meningiomas, and you know that most of them have progesterone receptors, and what relevance does that have? Nothing, nothing, you know why? Because the brain has estrogen and progesterone receptors, yeah, yeah. Colon? Yeah, pancreas, prostate, almost all cells have them. What are what alpha are beta? Yeah, well, there's confusion there. Anyway, just because there's estrogen receptors, and then it must be uh somehow related. So what they're looking for is the a way to target a therapy to target the meningioma. So so the interesting thing is that since most of these meningiomas occur in women who are post-menopausal, the whole idea of estrogen and progesterone sort of becomes uh what why do I say that? Because during when a woman's gone through menopause, she has very low levels of estrogen and progesterone. You know, so it's all I can tell you is that it's a completely confused and unknown situation. And so what I'm saying is that it's really not confused and unknown. Just they are because they can't find a drug to target it. That's what they're looking for. They're looking for they're they're at war. Remember, we're talking about the uh military here, right? Rocky and his gang are military. So the thing is this we eliminate all toxins. We start with our biological dentist, our certified biological dentist who's certified by the IAOMT, right? That's what we're looking for. That's how we start. And we also do it, start our cleansing, we do all this all the things that we know for cleansing. We've got to clean out, we've got to remove all toxins, and that's gonna include plastics and whatever other environmental toxins you've been exposed to, you know, mold, whatever it is, you need to clean that out. And you will do that when you realize that there's no other option, and that it's the only thing that not only makes sense but works. All right. And you only come to the conclusion that you need to do something like that is when you've suffered enough. Unfortunately, or maybe fortunately, uh human beings are not that smart. And so we have to be hit on the head a few times before we're gonna say, Oh, okay, I better go that way. I keep getting hit on the head when I go this way, right? And that's called pain and suffering. So pain and suffering uh help help us modify our course, otherwise, we're gonna keep doing whatever we were doing at, you know, either either either we grew up either these were you know dietary and social habits that we got from our family or we uh were exposed to during adolescence or whatever. But you know, there's a point at which our lifestyles become extremely toxic. And we're not why should I stop it? I'm having fun, you know. We're not gonna stop until we get in until we have pain or suffering, and then we're gonna say, wait a minute, I better rethink this. And that's why we rethink it. So pain and suffering are our best friends because logic doesn't work. Believe me, I speak logic to people, it doesn't work. So that's why I uh I went, I went away and I took this uh course, and then I went to graduate school in um in uh and I've got a PhD now in sarcasm, yeah, and sarcasm works a lot of times because it sneaks in right under the door. It's like sarcasm and humor are kind of two ways of sneaking under the door for all the people with the walls up. But still, again, after the conversation between you and I is over, you go back to living your life, and unless you're in pain, unless you're suffering enough, you won't change. So bring it on. You know, if that's what we need to make a change that's going to that's going to result in us having a healthy, happy life, then let's do it. All right. If that's what was required, all right. So that apparently is. So um we clean everything out, we make sure we're eating the right things, and we make sure we're living according to our biological our biology, our biology, believe it or not, is that we are diurnal. We are diurnal, meaning we go to sleep with the sun, we wake up with the sun. That's how our physiology works. I might not like that because I love hanging out at midnight doing whatever, but the consequence of living and waking up at staying up at midnight every night is that I will not uh renew my cells, I will not have restoration of healthy cells, and I will have a quicker degeneration and I'm gonna age quick quickly. Yeah, for sure, 100%. That's it. You know, so if your goal is to age as quickly as possible, go to bed late, and then if you really want to like ensure 100%, eat just before you go to bed. Eat before you go to bed and go to bed late. Okay. Anyway, we live according to our biological requirements. If we do all that, then these things don't happen. And what I'm saying is that there's this growth in the second layer of the meninges, which uh happens in women more than men, but still happens to everyone at a later age. There's no real answer to how it comes about. But we know because we understand that the body is doing what it's doing in response to, so we have to modify, and we do that by what we eat. That's all I can say. But unfortunately, if your niece is having you know severe symptoms, I don't know, seizures or what's going on, and it's uh and and the word recurrence, don't use their words, okay. They're words, and there's no recurrence. That was a word, it means nothing, and it's their vocabulary. The thing is that what this growth of that layer in the meninges uh has never stopped because whatever's causing it hasn't been uh um dealt with, right? So that's what need to do. And she's 52, she's right in that uh, you know, right around the age of what's typical. Uh but again, it Betty, that's really what is required always with everything, but it's you know, especially for your niece. And what I would might suggest is what you andor her, her, speci specifically, and then if you're clearly very concerned about her, join the group, one of our groups, the CFC group. So we can talk and I can find out more. All right, because it's all right now. Let's go on to Deborah. It's cold. All right. Uh wait a minute. Where we go. Yay, there we are. Okay. This is not live stream, bro. Know that feeling with dealing with kids. Good, very good. Beautiful, beautiful. Okay. So, um, I never see anything from so here we are. Okay, let's go to the next question. So, next question is uh Deborah and it's saying that my niece, who is three years old, every time the child has the sniffles or a bad cough, they run to the doctor and antibiotics are constantly prescribed. She's an active little child and recently was sent to the doctor again because they notice some hair missing in spots on top of her scalp. The doctor gave her more antibiotics. Again, amoxicillin. Her parents only listen to the doctor and believe anything they tell them. My niece is constantly coughing, runny nose, and snores when she sleeps. And I noticed she has dark rings under her eyes. What can I do for this child to get them off the antibiotics that are not helping her condition and they are not getting answers of why she's getting sick? She recently had blood work drawn, about six vials of blood, and received no answer. She's also been vaccinated with COVID vaccine at one year old. Their go to food snack is candy and all things sugar. I'm just concerned. I'm a concerned aunt. What can I do? My gosh, Deborah. This poor little girl. I mean, I mean, you know, I feel like calling CPS. I'm not me, but I mean, you know, Khalid, all you people to talk, we need to get in the groups because I can't do that right now, okay? I have to do these. I I owe it to Deborah. She sent this question in, okay? Thank you. So please join these groups. Okay. So um, anyway, this poor little girl, three years old. Okay, one of the most beautiful things that you can ever see with is a child sitting there on the earth with their hands playing around with the earth, the soil, dirty, and a runny nose. What's happening? They're doing what is natural and they're getting exposed to all sorts of stuff so that their immune system is getting stronger. That's how you exercise the immune system. You that's how you exercise the immune system. Those runny noses, all that stuff, the sniffles, the coughs, and all that. That's our bodies getting strong, okay, so that we can grow up and be have a very healthy, uh, highly competent immune system. So that's the beautiful thing to see a little kid playing in the uh on the earth with um uh sniffles. And of course, so they gave so so so so she had spots, usually little losses of hair, you know, that it's called alopecia ariata. Um, and um, I never heard of the doc. I never heard of anybody giving an antibiotic for that. This guy uh or lady, whatever it is, this doctor. So, really, Deborah, the things that what can you do for this niece? Your niece is talk to your parents. Her parents, uh the first of all, she got the injection at one year old for covert ID. So I don't know what to say. This is you're nothing you can do, unfortunately, except talk to her parents and try to try to uh I don't know that you can't do anything for her, sadly. It's tragic. It's it's it makes you cry. You want to cry. This this poor little girl has no chance. She has a chance, but I don't know what it is. Her parents, what are you got? Her uh I Deborah, come on, you know. And I was gonna ask you, you said you know she's got dark circles under her eyes, and that she uh uh what are the other things and uh she snores when she sleeps. Okay, snoring enough on the child. I mean I was gonna say she must be overweight. Is she overweight? And then we see that she's eating lots of candy and sugar, and it's like it's like there's no there's nothing you can do. You gotta talk to her parents. It's crazy, it's just crazy. I don't know what to say about that, except child abuse comes in many, many forms, and it's not just physical or sexual, all right. It's this kind of stuff, too. It's child abuse. Absolutely, absolutely 100% child abuse. There's no difference than if they were teaching her how to smoke at three. Same thing. Why do I say that? Because the result will be the same, and that is extreme sickness and uh uh uh suffering. Tragedy. I have a swelling on my left clavicle, everybody clavicle here. Doctor says the results is a lipoma, but wants further tests. I'm really hesitant. Second issue is I have a smell that does not go away that really almost destroys me. I don't understand whether it is genetic or medical. All right, Irene, let's uh all right. So listen, uh, who's this? Uh all right, I don't understand it. Jennifer Lawrence, you want everyone to go see Dr. Kat Lindley. Is that true? Why do you want to do that, Jennifer? Well, why are you on our live stream doing that? And Hammy, why does it keep saying reload? Oops, something went wrong. Try reloading the page. Oops, something went long. All right, so anyway, whatever your name is, Jennifer Lawrence replying to Angela. Angela Condes, check out Dr. Kat Lindley. So, Hammy, good, all right. So, it was insane. People do the what's my god, what if you used all this effort at being helpful loving things for people instead of sneaking? Oh, the people are weird, my gosh. All right, so the smell, okay. So, here Irene, let's deal with this. So, first of all, the swelling on your clavicle. If they're saying it's a lipoma, lipomas are pretty easily all right, oh my god, and you, Luke Donald, Luke Donald, I got an idea. Why don't you go check out Cat Lindy? Luke Donald. All right, anyway, insane. You guys, it's insane. So the swelling, okay. If it's a lipoma, it's kind of like it feels like it's like it's kind of soft, it's got uh even borders, it's got even borders, and it's soft, and it's usually movable. I mean, you know, it's not stuck to the background to the tissues. All right, that's a lipoma, and you don't need other tests, there's no other tests to do. All right, so um, yeah. Now it's on your clavicle. So that's the question. Is it movable? Is it stuck? That's what that is it painful, is it, you know, there's a lot of things I would ask you if we were in a group, and I can have a dialogue because I need to find out more so I could really help you understand this. But if it's you know, you a lipoma is not hard to figure out. You touch it and it's a lipoma, it's a ball of fat. That's what lipoma is. It's a little ball of fat, it's well circumscribed, all right. And it's not pain, unless it unless it's big and it's in a place that's impinging on another structure in the body, it's not going to be a problem, all right. And uh yeah, so be yeah, be they don't need to do anything else. I'm telling you, if it is a lipoma, but since I can't talk to you, uh, I can't help you get to the bottom. But it's if it now, the second issue is that you have a smell that does not go away, it really destroys you. Smells you you don't really think it's genetic, do you? You think you have a gene to have a smell come out of you? Come on, don't be so hypnotized by these by Rocky and his gang. There's no genetic and medical, what does medical mean? All right. So when and you say smell, I'm not sure what you mean. Now, there are different places from which we can have uh odors coming out that. Are foul. Oftentimes the things that are odiferous are uh foul smelling. Uh many of them are anaerobic microorganisms. And kind of like um, I don't know, toe jam, blue cheese, that kind of stuff. That's kind of the weird smell. And then when we think of really foul, of course, we're gonna think of gas, and especially if someone who's got uh who has um lots of gallstones and they're not able to digest fat very well, uh the gas that they will get is extremely, extremely foul. It's very uh so that's one kind of foul, foul odor. But the probably not probably, the most foul-smelling odor that I've ever encountered in working as in this with people in hospitals and stuff, um, is I was called to the emergency room, and you know, usually um on the outside of the door before we go out, you have a chart. It talks about the person's chief complaint. Well, that chief complaint is chest pain, that chief complaint is bleeding, or chief complaint is whatever. I didn't have to read the chart, I couldn't get near, I got near the room, and it was foul. Very foul smell. Anyway, I went went in. They had some uh this peppermint type oil that we had we put on masks and we could smell that because it was really bad. Anyway, so I examined this guy, and um and the uh, you know, of course, you look in the mouth and uh, you know, for any anything going on in there, and then listen to the lungs. And I heard in the lungs that there was an area where it was like a pneumonia, right? There was except it didn't quite have the sound of a pneumonia, it was kind of just anyway. There's an area that it wasn't there was no no movement when the lungs would breathe that wouldn't move, it was like so obviously it was an abscess. And so with an abscess like that, and that's severe and all that, then we have to drain it. So we got him in position and all that, and then uh we're gonna put in and drain out the thing, and it was under such pressure that when we put in the needle, it was actually a little catheter, put in the catheter, it it blew out and this went all over my clothes and my shoes, I throw the shoes out, and it was yeah, yeah. So, my point is this where did it come from? It came from the mouth, went down into the lungs, and it was it the person that inhaled, and it was a an anaerobic organism, microorganism in the lung. Um, and it was a so when you say you have a smell that is ruining your life, I think of that kind of thing. So uh you need you need to get, I think you need to change doctors because if a doctor doesn't know if a lipoma is or not, then you because lipomas are not diagnostic challenges, they're really simple. And um, but with this thing here going on with you, uh I I'm not sure how bad it how bad this odor is, but it sounds like you said it's almost destroying you. So, and if I were able to communicate with you, I'd ask you questions, and I can't. So I wish you would Irene join what health and healing group or something. Okay, but anyway, you gotta consider that you could have an abscess in the lung, you could have an abscess in your mouth, uh, you could have um, you know, I I doesn't sound like you're talking about gas. So um, and if it were if it were an uh if it were an abscess skin lesion, you would be telling me that there's a skin, whatever. So you're not telling me that. So I've got to assume that you're talking about something that is not quite visible, uh, and yet it's extremely foul and destroying your life. So that's heavy duty. Um, anyway, you got to look into that. Look into your lungs. I mean, that's lungs, mouth, things like that. I wish I knew where you were. So anyway, join the group so we can talk Monday, tomorrow, you guys, tomorrow, tomorrow, 5 p.m., Arizona time. Um, okay, next one is Elizabeth. Four years lump on breast grown, changes shape, very hard near surface. Thought it was a spider bite. Next day, red circle heated formed sac. What test is available for depth, mass, and blood supply without being injected with contrast or 3D mammogram that crushes my cells? Wow. Pretty um okay. So wait a minute. Four years, a lump on your breast, it changes shape, it's hard near the surface. So it sounds like you thought it was a spider bite, I guess four years ago when it first came about, and the next day it had a red circle and it was hot. All right. I mean, that's could be a bite, sure, from what you're describing, and then it formed a sack. So you're saying it was it was fluctuant, soft. You see, why we need to talk. I need to find out what you're talking about. So here's the thing it's very odd. It doesn't, you know. Um, what I'm not getting from what your description here is it part of the breast tissue, or is it just like under the skin and sitting sort of on top of the the breast tissue? You know, is that what it is? It's four years, it's been around. So well, first of all, and you've got to the topic is parasites. So you're thinking of a parasite of some sort. Um, and you know, the tests for parasites, the like that for skin, we're not talking about gastrointestinal, we're talking about skin. Um, there's something called uh, you know, the snip, it's skin snip test. Um, and basically uh they use this for uh for onkopsoriasis, you know, river blindness, um, but they just scrape it, they scrape the skin um off from around that area, and then they soak it in a saline, real uh very salty. And what happens is the um the little uh what do you call it, the larva are drawn out because the salt sucks them out, right? And then they can see that that's called the skin synthesis. The other one is this, you know, skin scraping, where they just do that. They look under the microscope for mites and eggs and stuff like that. So that but that's you know not quite for what you're talking about. Um but you know, and then there's uh there's things like cutaneous leishmaniasis and stuff, which it doesn't sound like at all. So the only other other other thing I can think of on the skin would be uh myasis and um my a SIS. And this comes from fly larvae, larva, larvae. And uh these are called ectoparasites because they're on the outside of the body. So these could be debilitating, cause a lot of suffering, and uh extremely difficult to eliminate and all that. It doesn't sound like what you have because um you know, floral uh myasis, which is basically basically a fly, will lay its eggs somewhere near a wound. It could be a bite, whatever. And it gets and they live it lives on, it eats that tissue and it goes it, and the larvae go into your skin, and they be they spread around and they're painful and all that. So they don't they're not they're not gonna usually remain as one lesion. It's it spreads around and it's uh it's a horrible situation, but really doesn't sound like it. I mean, rarely, rarely there might be one for a while, but it's just not here. So I really don't know what you have, but it needs to be evaluated because uh if it's changing shape, it's hard near the surface. And yeah, I there's no need for a mammogram. It sounds like a good physical exam with hands. Uh, do you have lymph nodes uh affected? Are lymph nodes the armpit associated with that breast, any nipple discharge, any yeah, you know, there's it's got to be evaluated by someone who knows what they're doing. So have you gone to uh maybe find a dermatologist? Don't go to a go to a dermatologist. Actually, if you found a good internist, internal medicine, they're supposed to be major gatekeepers that are the pilots, captains, and they're able to uh figure out what's happening usually, a good internist, but sounds like they're harder, harder to find. But this can't be done. So, you know, I mean, are are there blood tests? Yeah, you know, other than doing these skin, these these tests, you know, there are but there are what they call serological markers, right? And um, you know, with where they test the blood for antibodies, uh, they can use the immunoblot, the elisa test, they're different ways for looking. Uh, and they look at the uh parasite mRNA, uh, they use PCR for that. Um, so there are ways that are where you don't have to invade the skin or anything like that. But you this you could so you could do that. You could start out with that and see see if if they could find anything like that. But again, any kind of miasis, any kind of uh or the all these other exotic ones uh are are pretty much ruled out. So this here doesn't really fit anything. So I would need to see, I'd need to see you. And if you do the if you could do the um join the groups, you know, um it's on your breast. I know you wouldn't want to share that publicly. So um, but anyway, um we could talk about it, you could describe it. Hold on, I ask quite, I have to ask questions. You gotta find somebody good in your area, you've got to find a uh, I would say uh, you know, considering what you think it is, the way you've described it, you don't want to go to a breast uh or any kind of internal medicine subspecialty because they're gonna want to do mammograms and all that sort of thing. That stuff would be if it were even considered, you might eventually wind up with a breast ultrasound, but first a good physical exam with hands and and a and a and a and a and a and a mind, a brain that was trained, a trained brain to figure out what's what it could possibly be. There's a lot of uh same, but you're saying a form sack heated, right? They so something bit it. That made that sounds like that was the origin. So so many things, Elizabeth. Join the group. Let me talk to you, okay. Tomorrow. All right. Next am I on now? I'm on again. Unbelievable. Wasn't that fun, you guys? Oh, I hope you guys come back. This is crazy. All right, remember Instagram is the fail safe. Okay, so if we've if I I would just be on Instagram, very, very, but this uh is the word frustrating appropriate, yes, it is okay. Extremely frustrating. I don't know what okay. Let's see. Okay, so we're on, I think, and let's go back to where we were. Where were we? We were with okay, right, Kevin.
SPEAKER_00:You were talking about where was let me find you, Kevin. Kevin, Kevin, Kevin, where was your gosh? All right, here we go. Okay, so where is it? Oh, you so your question, I'm sorry, Kevin.
SPEAKER_01:So liver CFCs. Um so okay, Kevin, you're focusing on the antiparasitics for liver CFCs. Now, liver CFCs is a major situation in your life that you've got to be doing more. You're asking me about one little section of this entire program that you should be on, and that's makes me nervous because I hope you're doing everything else that would that you need to do. You know, I hope you're you've you've had you've got a biological dentist, all that sort of thing. And um, if you've got a prime, and then when you say liver CFCs, don't use the word cancer, Kevin. Come on, don't use the word cancer, Kevin. Come on, do you like yourself, Kevin? Then don't use that word. All right. If you like yourself, don't use the word, okay? Um, so do you mean that it started in there? It's what they call a primary hepatoma, it's a primary liver CFC, or do you mean that it started somewhere else and it metastasized? Completely different in that um in the way it acts. And there are other other differences too. So uh, but I don't know what you're talking about, but but you but you're asking me about is lavimusol, which is it's it's it's synthetic, anti-helminthic, anti-worm. You're thinking ivermagnanthimbendazole and prosequantal, 600 milligrams a day is not usually the standard course, it's just for what we're talking about. In the conventional world, it is uh for only a few days, but for us it's different, it's usually 600 milligrams three times a day. But depending, I'm not sure of your situation at all. So I can't say, but that's usually what it is. And lycosamide is usually 500 milligrams three times a day. Is that what you were looking for? Those are the only two things you want because it doesn't look like you wanted to talk about what's going on. You just wanted those two dosages, and you could have asked Chad, okay. You know, your buddy Child, Chad GPT, whatever his name is, GPT. The point is the levimosole is like not was banned in this country for a while. Doesn't mean much, but um, I mean, you know, one of the things it it it causes is agranulocytosis, which is where your you uh you stop making granulocytes, which are the white blood cells that gobble up stuff, like neutrophils, you know, uh you know, basophils, eosinophils, those um, you know, and if you don't have neutrophils, you that that that those are the cells that get can get knocked down first in with chemotherapy, and people wind up going into septic shock. So um anyway, so that's one of the side effects from it. So it's kind of and bizarre, really, really, really bizarre is I don't know how they came up with this, but they use that as they when they cut uh cocaine, um, you know, they use it as an adulterant in in cocaine. It's very strange. I don't know how they came up with that. So it was actually taken away. This this drug was taken off the market for humans and just using veterinary medicine. Can you believe that? It's yeah, you know, the the world could not get more bizarre than it is. It could not. There's no way to get more bizarre than it is. Okay, so this is tragic here. It's tragic. Uh, but anyway, uh, could it be added? I wouldn't add it if you're taking iver magnetophymenazole, and I close my depressing quantum. What are you gonna add? You don't need to add, you've got everything covered, but I hope that's not all you're doing. And I don't know what you mean by liver CFCs. I don't know if it's started in your colon or your lungs, we don't know anything. So, Kevin, join the groups, join the CFC group, join go to drloody.com, join the group, and then tomorrow at 5 p.m. Arizona time, we which is the same time we started today. We will start tomorrow. Join the group and we can talk about this because I really want to understand what's going on. And I don't want you to, I don't want you to put your hopes into thinking that this is all you need to do. Uh it's an important part of it, but it's just a part, all right? And that's really my my message to you tonight, is that but I would not use this uh uh levimmus hull. I would not. It's just just get you got you first of all, you've already taken care of all the worms and uh with with the other drugs, and the side effects are just not worth it. All right, Kevin. Maria, lung CFCs. Please don't use that word. You guys keep using these words that are deadly. My 80-year-old husband has been diagnosed with malignant pleural mesothelioma in June this year with immunotherapy or chemo. Not an option for him. Please, can he try any alternative? All right, Maria. So I'm not sure where you are, Maria, but please, there's a lot of things he can do. And Maria, you you dr drloodi.com, just go there now, join it, join the CFC group, and let's talk tomorrow at the same time we started today, 5 p.m. Arizona time. Let's talk because this situation with your husband is something that needs to be dealt with quite seriously, methodically. And yeah, he can be helped. There's lots of things, lots of things we can get started with. Okay. And I'm glad they they they say that immunotherapy and chemo is not an option for him because it means they're not gonna poison him. So that's beautiful. You've been relieved. So, and and they pushed you over here. I can't believe that. That's amazing. You're it's a blessing, Maria. Right? So your husband is um mesothelioma. Okay, so as you know, that's uh again the line lining on the outside of the lung, excuse me. Um, you know, connecting it to the chest wall. Anyway, so let's uh please, because there's a lot of things he needs to do that we that anybody with CFCs needs to do, and we always talk about that, but you know, you know, and that's you know, cleansing and all that. And I don't know his condition, I don't know, is he having difficulty breathing? Is he having pain? Uh is he able to eat? You know, there's so much I don't know. So it's really uh it's impossible to give any advice at all at without that information. Um, so I but yes, lots of stuff we can do. And he's he's 80, means you know, is he's gonna need some uh peptides for his thymus glare to get his immunity going and all that sort of thing. So yes, so it does work. Maria, there's a lot of things we can do. Drloadie.com, get there now, join, and let's talk tomorrow, okay? I hope you guys do this because otherwise I with with with the with the detail and the level and the um you know the intensity, severity of these situations that are coming are coming up, they really require that we you you obviously want an answer, and the only way I can answer it is is is is is with this dialogue. I need to know more so I can help you. I can't help you. These are all they're vague and they're not enough. I know you that that's what you you don't look at it that way, but now you know this is not enough information for me. So I need I I want to help. I can't. So help me help you. Join the group, drloadie.com. But yes, Maria, yes, the answer is yes, we can help him. James, you said you would call my doctor for me about using ibermagnet and metazole so I can get rid of my parasite problem. I live in uh Gadsden, Alabama. I'm currently homeless and I have to get completely well, but he doesn't even listen to me about anything. Please help me by just telling him about the detox. All right, so here's the thing. Whether I I'm I never said I'm gonna call your doctor. If your doctor gets in touch with me, that's one thing. Okay, now here's the thing, James. You don't need to go through a doctor. And if you do go through, if you st if you're homeless, obviously your money's a problem, right? And if you get these medications through conventional ways, you know, so he writes a prescription. First of all, he won't write how much you need, he won't write the amounts that we usually uh suggest. He won't. And if he does, the pharmacy won't fill him. The pharmacy won't fill him because it's not it's not standard. Uh now, so there's a way of uh avoiding the whole thing, and there are ways of getting um of getting these. So we have um, if you've been watching or listening to these at all, you'll know that there are many ways online to get these medications, and usually a lot less expensive than you would if you went to through a pharmacy, a standard retail pharmacy. So there's the FenBen, uh whatever it's called, Fenben, I think it's called FenBen Labs, right? Fenben Labs. And then there's Nyclosam.com. Um, but anyway, and then and then uh in fact, someone will be able to direct you, guide you. If you go to hello at the drlood.com, drlodi.com, hello at drloody.com, someone can maybe help you direct you on where to get these. But that's not how it works. I don't call your doctor and then tell him to what to do, right? You have to have spoken with your doctor, they're interested in collaborating with me, they would contact me and let me know, and that's how it works. Yeah, so um, but remember, if you do that way, there's it's not gonna work anyway, they won't do it. It's these are these are they're they're they're they're they're higher doses, uh more frequent than is standard, and so he won't write it. And if he does, this pharmacy won't fill it. So you've got to go the other ways. And I'm telling you, he these are the other ways. And if money obviously is a concern for you, um, then you know you need to find the least expensive way to deal with this. Um and uh you know, you said your situation sounds really uh horrible, and I wish I wish I could help you somehow because it's what's going on with this world, man. That's so sad, uh Vincent or James. Your your doctor state of Vincent, sorry. Um my gosh, how can I say so? It sounds like you might have an income, but you don't have a home. So wow, how could that be? Alabama, my gosh, I don't know what to say. I I would probably get enough, try to gather enough money to buy an airplane ticket and get out of there. The closest place probably is Mexico, Costa Rica. It just, I don't know. Doesn't sound like you're in the right place, James. Consider not being there because it's it's not treating you very kindly. Oh, so sad. But anyway, that's it. Go to hello at drlood.com, drlodi.com, and we can guide you on how where to find them. I was found with a rare myosarcoma, within a rare intersception. I struggle with the condition after mold exposure, genetics, pesticides, mold exposure, genetics, pesticides, and much more, creating MCs, which is a chemical sensitivity to everything. I'm so sensitive, should be OCS, and I'm behind on scans because every office is almost impossible to enter my reactions. My brain and heart are affected extremely. They're also saying possible return to liver seeing spots on the lungs and white matter lesions on the brain. I am a mom of an eight-year-old and a 26-year-old. And with MCs, MCs fighting this. I'm not gonna say the word cancer, and you should never say it again, Debbie. But you guys, they got you. Rocky's gotcha. He's got your language, so he's got you. If you don't change your language, you're dead, people. If you don't change your language, you're dead. You've got chronically fermenting cells. Okay. And I don't know what MCs is, I don't know the acronyms, I don't know what OCS is, I don't know what MCs are. So please, when people write me, don't use acronyms because just remember, I'm acronomical, acronomically stupid. Anyway, so 26-year-old with MCs fighting this CFCs, any options that are available are impossible for me. So I'm looking for the most natural way to do this after getting sick. It's open to my eyes to many things, especially how toxic our world truly is, because I feel every bit of it due to the MCs, it makes life on to navigate it. Do you know what might have caused spindle cell MEA in the intestines with a complete blockage? I was first diagnosed with colitis and kidney stones a week later, returned ER to have emergency surgery. No one wanted to listen to the environmental aspects of what was causing all of my reactions to why they thought I would be on a ventilator when I say I'm sensitive, I mean to everything, the chemicals. You've got to understand something here, uh, Debbie, that I don't really understand what you're saying. It's you I I you're obviously very sick, and uh you mentioned that it's affecting your your your brain and and all that, and you're very sick, and and but uh just to let you know that you and there's no punctuation at all here, and these are just run-on sentences, uh, and the syntax is odd, and so I just can't I I'm not sure. I've only seen one other person talk about having MCS. Anybody out there? Anybody out there help me with MCS? Anyone help me with MCS? What is MCS? All right, you guys, what is MCS? Anyone help me with MCS? MCS, Peter Nelson, a few core blood. All right, so anyway, I don't know what MCS is. I I I'm really having a hard time here with your question. Um so I uh I struggle, I'm sensitive to everything, the chemicals, and I struggle with MCAS also, and I have a lot of spinal issues. MCS, mast cells, MCS. I step into the oncologist's office because they are doing chemo radiation 20 feet from where I'm yeah, okay. So you're you're I can't understand you okay. Uh Debbie, I hope so. It just says try reloading again. So again, restream just went off again.
unknown:Okay.
SPEAKER_01:Anyway, everyone, um, anyway, okay. I apologize, Debbie, but I don't understand you, and I understand you're in deep, deep distress. And uh sounds like you have very good reason to be distressed, and and no, and your your your your your ability to communicate has been impaired. So, Debbie, if you can get to drloodie.com, drlodi.com, join the CFC group. We need to talk, meet twice a week. We'll meet every Monday and Wednesday and talk and help you. Because at this point, I don't even really know. And I know you have a lylomyosarcoma, and I know it occurred in the rare place, but that doesn't matter. Remember, it doesn't matter wherever it occurs is is just where it occurs. It doesn't the the only relevance of where something occurs is because the its local effect is going to be in that area, right? So you know, and that's the relevance of any location. In a location, whatever organ something uh at CFCs begin, the the particular function of that organ, the drainage patterns in the vein, the blood vessel, uh, the veins, the lymphatics, the organs that are near it, all of that um is what's relevant. But don't get lost on a question like why would it form there? Just you know, it doesn't matter. Even if you knew why, that's not gonna change that it did. And so that's what we have to deal with. Okay, so it that it did. All right, so you really need some clarity in your life. Right now, you're very confused, and I don't uh what so you're very confused, you're very just get in touch with me because I cannot. First of all, I don't I I there's way too much that I don't understand in your communication for me to be able to address them, except that you need some real powerful, strong help, and that's what I will provide. But you gotta get in touch with me. You gotta join drloodie.com, drloadie.com. Join it and see, I'll see you tomorrow at 5 p.m. Arizona time. Okay, be there. Debbie, be there. Can you send me a message saying you're gonna be there? Nobody's gonna send me a message. All right, well, all right, I think you should be there, Debbie. Okay, Darko, request for oh, interview for Macedonian Information Agency, Republic of Macedonia. Sure, Darko. I'll have someone contact you, Alice. Okay, and let's happy to help out in that area. Yes, the answer is yes, Darko. Depend I'm not sure what you're talking about, but um, if it's for information for the Republic of Macedonia regarding what? Oh, CFCs, ivermectin, fenazole. Happy to do that now. Because a really small thing, here's Jeffrey, breast CFCs. Why not use DMSO to make fen benazol ivermectin soluble and apply it topically to your clean, dry skin to treat breast stage four? All right, so Jeffrey, so your thing here uh regarding breast CFCs is Jeffrey, you and everybody else, why are you guys using the word? Can I ask you guys a question? Why are you all using this word cancer? You know what it means, right? Everybody, it means death, it doesn't mean anything else. Every time you hear it, you completely destroy your immune system. So why do you keep saying it? First of all, it's not true. It's not true. Having chronically fermenting cells, just that's all it is. All right, it's something that can be dealt with, and it can be dealt with in a logical way because you understand what it is is chronically fermenting cells. It's not this monster called cancer. Okay, stop using the word my god, I don't know what it takes. So, anyway, Jeffrey, for stage four uh uh breast CFCs is what you're asking me about breast, using DMSO to make fenbenzole and ivermectin uh soluble and spray it and apply it topically. You can use DMSO and you can get these uh the fenbenazole and ivermectin, you can get them in a paste form or however you want to get them and and and that yes, yes, yes. You can do that. All right. Um, but you've got to understand that's what's happened is people have come to think that this is this that that that that these drugs will are the cure. There's no cure. You've got to do the same things you've always got to do. And that is, and I will, and I'm and and it it's it's amazing that it has to be repeated so many times, but I will always do that. And that is you've got to get rid of the garbage, you've got to clean out. Okay. Again, something went wrong with the restream. It just told me I was off again. Anyway, here's the thing. So it's not just fimbendazol overmectin. Yes, that would probably work. That will work. Okay. But you said stage four, that means it's already another organs. So um that's so even if it's helpful in that area, it's not going to change that it's in the in the other areas, which is why you definitely have to do all the cleansing and other things we talked about, getting your scorbate, your vitamin C levels up, you know, all these things you've got to get up. Your vitamin C, your mixed uh uh carotenoids, your mixed uh tacophrils and topotrianols, which are E, vitamin D, melatonin, iodine thyroid adrenals, melatonin, thymids. Okay, there are things you've got to do in addition to this. So, yeah, and I don't know um which form of fembendazole or ivermectin one would use with DMSO. So, what I would do with that question that you're having there is to go to a compounding pharmacist and ask them how one could go about doing this so that it would be effective, all right? Because uh, you know, you've got to look at solubility, you've got to look at uh pH. There's a lot of things to look at. Um, and that's why you need someone who's trained in that area. So I would do that, Jeffrey. I would go to a compounding pharmacist in your area um and discuss it with them. This is Lizzie, and why is this so small? There we go. Yay, chemo for breast thyroid CFCs five years ago. All good. Eating plant-based three years, no booze, no dairy, all of it. My question is recently my whole left foot becoming numb and tingly seems to be progressing. Not sure what's going on. What do you think is caused? I was diagnosed with Hashimoto years ago, and why hasn't my clean diet? Huh? Okay, so wait a minute. So you you're eating plant-based. Okay. All right, well, here's Lizzie. Um, your left foot is having the symptoms you're describing are neurological. It sounds like some sort of you know, it's per what they call peripheral because it's not in the spine, so it's peripheral uh neuropathy, which just means that you've got some nerve involvement because you're saying it's what it's nominally, that's a nerve. You know, it doesn't usually occur in just the foot, because the spinal nerve, the nerve that's coming out of the spine, you're talking about foot, you're talking about the lumbar, the lower lumbar and sacral area, lumbar. So when the spine's when the when the nerve is coming out of the spine, if there's any kind of you know imbalance, osteoporosis or anything with the uh with the bones in your uh called the vertebrae, that can affect impinge on the nerve root as it's exiting the spine, and then the entire route of that nerve would be affected. So usually it's not just the foot, it would probably be whatever, whatever particular nerve. So it might go down the left side of the leg and a crossover, it might go the side. So um try to be aware is it other other than your foot, are there any other areas up that leg that might be involved? But anyway, so that's what it sounds like. It'd be very difficult for it to just be your foot. For it to just be your foot, it would have to be that there are there's like something in your ankle or something that is impinging on the nerves as they come through the ankle into the foot. I mean, that's a possibility, but you would probably know if there was something like that going on. And is it your whole foot? One side or another. So um, anyway, try to be aware of of whether or not there's a pathway there uh of coming out. And you need to see a good doctor, you know. I always hesitate when I say doctors because we've got to make sure it's a doctor who does not going to want to doesn't have their own agenda and thing, but they're really gonna try to help you figure out what's going on with you. So normally a neurologist would be a good one to examine and figure out exactly what nerves are involved. But as I'm saying, it's very unlikely that it's just your foot, it's probably spinal. Um and then there are ways, let's say, for example, that you do have a nerve impingement on one of your lumbar spine, where the nerves exit. The conventional algorithm says that you need to do, you know, you need to go to an orthopedic surgeon and they remove stuff, and you don't need to do that. There's something called prolotherapy, which you could find a uh you gotta find an alternative practitioner who is trained in it. But prolotherapy is a way of uh dealing with any kind of those kinds of infringements that are basically anatomical and blah. Uh, and you need a good, strong, solid uh doctor who can also look at the fact of whether or not you've got some osteoporosis, and uh how can we deal with that? We can deal with that by doing disodium EDTA. We can deal with that getting just tuning up your body, getting rid of toxins all in all. And now you're plant-based, which is great, but um, you know, again, we've got to look at what exactly what constitutes your diet, right? Because you could be you could be an unhealthy plant-based or healthy, healthy plant-based. It's bizarre. But for example, Loma Linda, where they do all the Seventh-day Adventists, you know, the university for the Seventh-day Adventists, which are vegetarian. If you go to their hospital cafeteria, there was pretty bad food. It was plant-based, but it was you know, macaroni and cheese and you know, things like that. So anyway so you've done great. And now keep in mind that thyroid and breast are on the same meridian as your teeth as well, right? So, um, and I don't know, you I hope hopefully you went to a biological dentist. And if you didn't, you're gonna go right away to an A-O-M-T by certified certified biological dentist and have them do a 3D cone beam uh CT to find out what's going on because the breast thyroid are the same meridian, and they go down to stomach and either spleen or pancreas. You want to definitely do that. And Hashimoto's is a name they put on um of an iodine deficiency thyroid problem. Um, which we you know the way that works is you've got to be taking supplemental iodine while while you are taking a um a thyroid uh medicine of some kind. Um and using using the uh natural ones like um westroid or thyrogans, what's the one? Anyway, they're they're either from you know pigs or cows, um, or if you're don't want to use those because of your ethics, then you could get uh synthetic synthroid, which is T4, and then a synthetic uh um cytomel, which is a T3, and um you want to take them um in the appropriate proportions, the T4 to T3, um, and you're gonna base your you're gonna titrate up to the right dose based on your base ultra body temperatures because we can't trust the blood tests for T4 and T3 because we don't have enough iodine, because we're all iodine deficient, unless we're eating a lot of seaweed in our diets, and most of us are not eating a lot of seaweed, so we don't have enough iodine. If we don't have enough iodine, even if our blood tests are normal, they're uh that's because they're only looking at the molecules in a very gross way and not looking at the details. And if they looked at the details, they'd see there's not iodine there's no iodine there uh in where it needs to be. That's what they would see, but they don't look for that, so you can't rely on the blood test. But what you can rely on is your basal body temperatures, and you check those out by getting your armpit temperature in the morning before you get out of bed because you don't want to as soon as you start walking, you generate heat. So you don't want to change your body temperature. You get your and you do that five days in a row. And if it's less than you take the average, right? Five days, add them up, divide by five. And if you're less than uh 97.8 Fahrenheit or 36.8 um Celsius, then you are hypolo thyroid. And that's what you titrate up. So you'll take you'll take you'll take the medicine in and incrementally, but you've got to be replacing the iodine, right? Lugols or uh iodorol. You've got to be replacing the iodine because if you don't, then you'll have to be taking these medications for the rest of your life. If you're replacing the iodine, eventually in a couple years, when all the iodine, when your iodine uh deficit has been completely filled, then you have enough iodine, you won't need uh to take the medicine anymore because you'll be making your own healthy thyroid. Okay, that's very important. Remember, breast and thyroid are on the same meridian. You need to have checked that out. Your foot, I'm pretty sure it's spinal, but you need to get that checked by a competent neuro neurologist who would do it. Uh yeah, and usually they see if you can find a neurologist. A chirop a good chiropractor should be able to tell you what's going on, too.
SPEAKER_00:Really?
SPEAKER_01:So um, I mean, let me know. Let us know. Let us know where you're what what's going on. And join if you join the health and healing group, you can talk to join drloodie.com.
unknown:Okay.
SPEAKER_01:Now, where are we here? This is yeah, okay. So here's Michael. What about Crohn's disease? Okay, so Crohn's is uh for those of you who may not have be familiar with it, is um it's kind of like these little, they're almost like ulcers with plaques that they're go all the way from the colon all the way up through the small intestines. And the person usually has you know diarrhea, bloody diarrhea, there can be mucus in it. It's really quite debilitating. And basically, it's a severe form of dysbiosis. Okay, and that's what it is. You know, in other variations, they might call it SIBO, right? Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth is names, or they'll call it ulcerative colitis or colitis, or there's all different names, but there's basically a dysbios by dysbiosis, meaning that the the microorganisms in your gut are not in the in the in in the relative proportions that would um produce health. Okay, because they're their health requires a healthy microbiome. That's one of the ways. And if you want to say, if you want to find out if someone's healthy, you look at the microbiome. Because if it's well proportioned, you're fine. Now, just to keep in mind, and I say this every week, and I'll probably be saying it every week until I can't speak anymore, and that is this whatever microorganisms you have in your gut are there because you're feeding them, and the ones that are not there are not there because they don't have anything to eat. So, depending on what you're eating, will determine what you is the makeup of your microbiome. So, if you with Crohn's in any of those conditions, you have to first of all couple do it, juice cleanse, and then maybe even a water fast, and then eat uncooked organic plant food, period. All right, and if you're sick enough, if you've been having a big problem with this and you've suffered enough, then you're gonna say, Okay, I'll do it. If not, you're gonna say, Well, I don't know. And if you're saying that, still, you need to go back out and suffer. Okay, when you're done suffering and you're ready to do to heal, then this is what you do. There's only one way. You've got to restore the healthy gut microbiota, and you can only restore that by cleansing it and then feeding it the right way, going to sleep early. You know, all these things to make you healthy. You know, there's all and you got to make sure you're by you know you go to a biological dentist. It's never different for anyone. You the focuses are maybe a little different depending on the situation. So, in your situation, really want to focus on that. So, we would also be remember recommending you get bifaninate, bif bifenate. You can find it online. Um, it's a powdered uh bifidobacter bifidus, which is um a colon bacteria. Uh, and you can make the powder mix it with water, and you could get uh water, and then you could draw it up into a bulb syringe or some other way of putting it into your rectum just before you sleep so that it has a chance to uh colonize uh and and be taking probiotics, but then eating real food only after you've done a nice cleanse. All right, so that's really what you should do. I just hope you do this because I know most people don't do it, they don't want to do it. So, Michael, you know what? Join the health and healing, at least join the group so we can talk about Crohn's for you. I don't know if it's for you or a friend or a loved one or whatever, but uh it's really the conventional world literally, literally tells you they don't have it, there's no answer. And that's because there are their answers are always military, they always want to kill something and fight something. What we want to do is restore, restore balance, restore harmony, restore all the right stuff. So it's a completely different paradigm. So, yes, there is no military answer to your situation, but there's definitely a way for you to heal. Absolutely, 100% certainty. So, Michael, so we can instead of you know, you just heard what I said, you could do it, that would be fantastic, but you're gonna run into situations, you know, like you're gonna have questions. So that's why we need to interact. It's very important. Okay, so it is really uh can you do it? Can you do a segment of peptides and bioregulators possibly leaking into more obscure research chemicals? I asked due to interest, not targeted health issues outside of the normal energy and lameness. I remember you speaking about MOTC and TB500 or BPC 157. I don't remember, but I'm sure you spoke about MOTC. I'd really love to hear your take on it. Okay, yeah, so sure. Uh yeah, I'm I do I do speak about those things. I guess I should do another webinar on that. Um, I don't know if there's any on YouTube that I did already in the past about about those peptides. But yeah, I talked about MOTC and SS31 and you know BPB BPC 167. They're all have different uses. Um, but yes, absolutely. Absolutely. I will. All right. Um, well, you guys have so many questions. I just can't get to them all. Wow. And they're really important questions. So join the groups, you guys, so that we can really get into this stuff and work it out for you instead of because I feel like my my answers are just not going to be satisfying, satisfactory. They're not for anybody. We really need to go into these things in you know in more detail and take it all seriously, okay? Because you've got serious concerns, your questions are serious and they deserve serious answers. So uh dr loadie.com, go there, join these groups, and let's get this going, okay? So, anyway, um, I apologize for this restream that keeps going down, but uh anyway, thanks for hanging in there, and I'll see you all next week. So, what you got up? Lamos day, low. Aloha, and we're gonna be able to